Okay, so I broke a stud when trying to remove the exhaust manifold. One removed, one broken, the rest taunting me. At this point I'm weighing my options: 1. Just bring the car in to an exhaust shop to get do the job right. I'm thinking it would be difficult for a mechanic to reach the furthest back stud (that's the one I broke) in order to drill it out and tap it. Might have to remove the carb and a bunch of hoses to open up room. 2. Man up - I could probably remove the carb, the intake manifold, remove (or break) the rest of the studs, then remove the head. After removing the head, I could bring it in to a machine shop to remove any broken studs properly - and drill out and tap where appropriate. I know most of the folks on this list would opt for removing the head and bringing it to a machine shop. It doesn't look that hard, and fixrambler.com has some snazzy pictures. So - any hints on doing this properly? Is it a fairly straight-forward deal? Folks that have done it before - do you have a step-by-step I could cross-reference with the TSM? I'm giving serious consideration to doing it myself. I'm trying to weigh between ponying up cash to get it done, versus breaking out the digital camera to take pics beforehand and just doing it myself. If I do remove the head, I'd probably have a machine shop remove the stud and tap the hole - I did take machine shop for three years in high school - but don't have access to the tools required to do the job right. For those that have had exhaust manifolds and broken studs taken care of by an exhaust shop - did they do the job to your liking, or did they mess up your car? Would they need to remove the head anyway, or is there a "magic" way to remove broken studs? (the stud is still accessible - it broke just past the exhaust manifold flange) _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list